Aranovus Limited
  • Home
  • News
    • News
    • Natural Capital
  • Profile
    • Profile
    • Our People
    • Our Mission
    • Our Identity
    • Our History
    • Synovus Technology
    • Health And Safety
    • Insurance
    • Sustainability
    • Green Building
  • Services
    • Services
    • People
  • Ecology
    • Ecology
  • Research
    • Research
    • Community Surveys
    • Community Consultation
    • Impact Assessments
    • Science Communication
    • Social Research
  • Projects
    • Projects
    • Great Barrier Island
    • Hectors Dolphin
    • Kauri Dieback
    • Waiatarua
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Enquiry

Auckland's microforests

18/3/2016

0 Comments

 
Auckland's original forest cover has been almost completely removed by humans leaving a patchwork of fragments in valleys and on steep slopes.  This began when Auckland's rich volcanic soils were sought after for growing food, first by Maori and then by European settlers.
Picture
​The pressure for land clearance still remains, to allow the building of motorways and other infrastructure, and the forest fragments that do remain have often been logged to remove the largest trees for timber leaving them as a shadow of their former glory.

Despite this, Auckland's microforests are really interesting to visit if you have a little spare time. Possibly the easiest to visit is the forest in Gribblehirst Park in Sandringham which grows in a carpark on a lava flow from Mt Albert. Another is a lava forest in Withiel Drive on the slopes of Mt Eden whereas others include Kepa Bush in Meadowbank and Dingle Dell in St Heliers.

On the northern edge of Auckland there remain surprisingly large forest patches, such as at Wenderholm. In this area we have begun working with a landowner who has covenented some significant forest patches to protect them and plans to enhance them with restoration plantings to expand them, link them together, and to undo the ravages of decades of stock grazing.

The proposed development of adjacent farmland for housing will release capital to allow this ambitious work to proceed and is a great example of a win-win outcome. The public will get protection and enhancement of ecological resources at no cost and future residents will get a wonderful environment in which to live, complete with their own dawn chorus.
0 Comments

Living with a forest

27/8/2015

0 Comments

 
Picture
Over the past year or more we have been working with Sanctuary Heartland Ltd on their exciting and innovative residential development in Flat Bush. "The Reserve" is a 65 unit townhouse development being built on the corner of Murphy's Road and Flat Bush School Road where half the site is a protected forest remnant just north of Murphy's Bush, the largest remaining native forest patch in the Auckland metropolitan area.

​Despite being in poor condition after decades of grazing, the forest is showing remarkable resilience after the removal of animals and regeneration is appearing everywhere, including a white rata seedling growing on a tree trunk. Ecological restoration has focused on invasive weed and pest control, combined with supplementary planting to re-establish a subcanopy layer.

The design of the development provides an innovative, people-friendly, built environment with all vehicle traffic in underground garages and wide, open ground level pedestrian lanes between the buildings with pathways extending into the forest as a common space. New residents can look forward to living at the level of the tree canopy with two remnant puriri trees also forming large specimen trees amongst the buildings. This is a great example of how development can be clustered to provide room for environmental resources to be preserved and restored and one of Auckland's scarce native forest remnants can look forward to a much brighter and more secure future as a result.
0 Comments

    Aranovus News


    ​On this page are our occasional news items to update you on some of the interesting projects we work on, some of the interesting places we visit and some of the interesting things we get to do.

    ​Check back from time to time and leave us a comment, or use the RSS Feed to stay up to date with our news.  We look forward to your feedback.

    Read Our Blog Here

    Categories

    All
    Flora
    Land
    People
    Urban Ecology
    Water


    Archives

    March 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015


    RSS Feed


Aranovus Limited,   PO Box 24-522,   Royal Oak,   Auckland 1345.     T:  0508 973 573     M:  027 277 5433     E:  office@aranovus.co.nz     W:  www.aranovus.co.nz
Copyright  ©  2014 Aranovus Limited   |   Site Map   |   Privacy   |   Terms of Trade   |   All rights reserved
Aranovus News
Natural Capital Blog